Story time

Poppy and I have been attending a story time for bobblers (children who more than babies, not quite toddlers) once a week since the beginning of September. During the first week or so, I noticed that Poppy was on the younger end of the age spectrum, as most of the kids were already walking and jumping and clapping. Oh well, at least it’s an hour out of the house for us each week, right? I’ll admit, I did feel like we were a little out of place for sure. The library we patron is most definitely in the ‘burbs. Like North Face jackets, khaki capris, SUV-heaven suburbs. And not to mention the holier-than-thou attitude from moms who clearly wake up at 6AM just to shower and put make-up on for story time. Poppy and I show up sleepy eyed, but eager, if that counts for anything here.

From day one, I kind of felt like the new kid in junior high. We were different, clearly. I had a mom walk her almost two-year-old son over to us and said, “Oh your baby is so young to be doing story time!” and then proceeded to snicker over in the corner with some other mamas how they should just start their own group with the more advanced children. Ok, whatever. Bite me.

Anyway, Poppy was really enjoying the story time, especially watching these kids run and play and sing along to all the songs. We were fine sitting on the side and observing the suburban culture at it’s finest. And of course, watching the librarian blow bubbles all over the room is always AWESOME no matter your age or socio-economic class.

This week, something wonderful happened. After the first song “Choo-Choo” was over, all the babies and mamas started clapping, which is routine of course. Except, my little Poppy looked gleefully around the room and started clapping too! And clapping, and clapping, and clapping! I can’t tell you how excited I was for her. She was joining in the fun. My heart literally swelled with pride. Of course, no one was paying attention to this, but I was. I called Jacob on the way home, “She clapped with the kids!” My eyes still fill up with tears when I think about it. I have thus far successfully raised a little girl who can clap! Or maybe it’s that I see her growing up and I watch her love on other kids and play with them and smile at them and talk to them and poke them in the eye and clap with them! She may not own the latest GAP clothes or ride in style in the back seat of a silver Land Rover, but my god, she loves to clap!

Waving

Some thoughts on the value of children

I feel like the subject of children and babies has come up a lot lately in my Internet circle. Because this is my personal website, I’m just going to go ahead and throw my two cents into the pot. Feel free to disagree.

Children are more than status symbols. They are more than accessories. More than the completion of a family. More than a marriage fulfilled. More than a woman fulfilled.

Society passes right by children as people. We simply equate babies right into the American dream alongside big weddings, jobs, cars and houses. For real, people. These are HUMAN BEINGS we’re talking about here. Little souls that will grow up to be big souls. Little hands, hearts, and minds that will grow to be YOUR REPLACEMENT on this planet. You were a baby once, anticipated greatly by a woman who called herself Mother. Have I used the CAPS key enough? Have a little respect.

When I got pregnant with Poppy, I was shocked at the number of people that said to me, “How long have you been married? A year? Well, that seems about right, then!” Seriously, people. Jacob and I never sat down and said Dating, Engagement, Marriage, BABIES! I’m not a baby machine. And frankly, none of this has anything to do with why or when to have a child. I’m tired of people writing off childbearing and rearing as just another part of a “normal” Western life.

In my culture, I’m too young to have a child. Why not have a career or a life of my own first? To this, I say hutty putty. HUTTY PUTTY. Giving life to a human being, who I am privileged to know and love, is one of the most empowering feelings in the whole world. It is the wholeness of my female body and the completion of my sexuality. It is the only thing I can work on that will last beyond my life. I am perfectly capable of having a career, a life, and children at the same time. Give me some credit.

Having a baby is more than onesies and bottles and hairbows and cute shoes. (C’mon, the shoes ARE cute). Despite the mainstream resources that FLOOD American media and the Internets, child rearing isn’t just about the image. Many wonderful mothers will tell you just that if you’d take the time to ask them, instead of brushing them off as desperate housewives. Having a baby doesn’t mean you get heaped into the pile of the socially “average.” I’ve known some very non-mainstream people in my life that have had wonderful experiences with children. Wonderfully marginalized experiences.

I can only speak for myself, and I’m not judging anyone who doesn’t get the whole “baby” thing. I just wish people would open their minds a bit more to the idea that children are human beings too. And women who have children aren’t just a bunch of mommyblogging sows with nothing better to do then fulfill their duties as baby factories. They are intelligent, strong women who can see the value in giving life where no one else can give it.

The end.

Parenthood in the age of scientific research, blogging and the Internet

Thursdays always make me think…

Coming into my parentness has been the most incredible journey I have traveled thus far. More incredible than my journey into adolescence and adulthood. More transforming than my journey into wifehood. Parenthood has been the fastest track to the discovery of so many things about myself, my spouse, my family, my friends, my world. Truly.

The hardest thing about becoming a parent has been the labels. Really, you wouldn’t believe what’s going on out there in the parent ‘hood. So many labels, arguments, crusaders. A new parent has to but merely hit “breastfeeding” in the Google search bar to find a myriad of angry, hurt, justice-questing parents blogging, tweeting, and creating Internet cliques for parents on every point on the parenting spectrum. As a new parent, it’s so hard to find a place to fit. When every other parent feels as though they must take on the cause for YOUR child, it can be super overwhelming to hold your own and do what you know is the best for your baby.

Before I had Poppy, I thought I knew who I was and how I felt about the way I wanted to live. After just six months of coming into my parentness, I am finding that I know nothing for sure about myself and even less for sure about the world around me.

There is an unspoken cloud looming around parenting and the Internets. An almost tangible pressure on new parents to fight the attachment parenting/hippie/crunchy against the mainstream/plastic parenting style. If you’re not for the “cause” then you are against it. If you dare open your mouth and say, “Look, this is OK for me and my family and it lines up with our values,” you had better be ready for the Internet’s equivalent of a tropical storm. You will be left standing alone in the wreckage of your choices and your once confidence.

When I DECIDED to give up on breastfeeding after seven weeks of trying, with not but one ounce a day of milk and several shady prescription orders from New Zealand, I was wracked with so much guilt. If one more person said to me, “Breast is Best!” I was going to puke. Do you really need to tell me that? Obviously I can tell from my own body that it’s trying to feed it’s new baby, but it can’t. I don’t need anyone to tell me that what my body should do naturally is the best thing for me and my child.

And you know what? You don’t need to tell anyone else. If they want to bottle feed, then it’s their choice. I’m sure their baby will be just fine, because mine is. Whether it’s for medical or convenience reason, what does it matter to you? If you feel guilty telling a woman who can’t breastfeed for medical reasons that she is not doing what is best for her and her baby, then why do you need to take up the cause against a mother who makes the same choice for a different reason? Choice, people. Choice. I believe strongly in it and I think every new parent should be supported in their CHOICES. For the same reason I believe in homosexuals’ right to adopt, the right of parents to chose any form of education they see fit for their children, and the right of every parent to live in peace with the decisions they make for themselves and their children. Come on Internets, grow up. Don’t take up causes for people who have every sense and right to make choices for their babies. It’s all good, yo.

Breastfeeding isn’t the only issue here. Natural birth. Organic food. Pacifiers. The list goes on. I used to think very black-and-white on these issues, but after experiencing them all myself, I don’t think I could every say any of them are black-and-white ever again. I wouldn’t do that to any parent who made a different choice than me. It’s about peace with ourselves, ultimately.

When I was pregnant, a trusted friend had me recite this… “If breastfeeding makes my baby smart, then formula makes my baby….?”

“Dumb?” I said.

Dumb. Poppy has been on formula since she was seven weeks old and I will punch anyone IN THE FACE who says she is dumb. Fer real. I will.

So let’s stop the back and forth. The hands up, guns out appraoch to parenting choices. Let’s honestly learn how to live in harmony, whether you are a co-sleeping, crunchy mama or a stroller-pushing, bottle-feeding mama. Let’s not set our kids against each other so early on. We’re all in the same court, let’s find what we have in common instead of what we don’t. Internets, let’s all be friends!

Poppy’s six month checkup and the reason I’ve almost brushed my teeth with a comb twice this week

Poppy

Poppy had her six month well-check today. She’s a hefty 19 pounds and falls in the 90th percentile for weight and the 75th percentile for both height and head circumference. If you’re going to do something, do it big. Am I right?

As I was talking with the doctor today, the issue of separation anxiety came up. The baby who once slept 10 hours straight at night and took several naps per day has suddenly lost her capability to fall asleep or stay asleep without Mom or Dad being in the room. And 3AM is the new hoppin’ playtime y’all. It’s like a midnight rave every night in that sweet little nursery of hers. The doctor and I talked and eliminated options like hunger, teething, etc. Turns out that little gal has just figured out that she likes being near me and when she starts reciting the Pledge of Allegiance over and over in the middle of the night, I will come and be with her.

I realize that there are several schools of thought on how to deal with this, and I would really, really like to hear from the mothers out there that have ever had a six month with the will of a mule. All that is clear to me right now is that this household cannot function without sleep. Poppy is so cranky and out of sorts and I know she is exhausted. I need suggestions – is there a happy medium between letting her cry it out and full-blown co-sleeping? Poppy doesn’t seem like the baby that would go for either of those extremes. Is there a magic baby sleeping pill y’all aren’t telling me about? Am I destined to live a sleepless life of brain farts and “What did I walk in here to get?”

Help!

A baby update

Thought I’d give a little update on Poppy and all the latest and greatest things she’s been up to. Feel free to hit ESC right now.

I will not start by saying that Poppy is a genius, because that’s what all mothers do. Instead, I will say that she is an ass-kicking genius who could eat your baby alive in game of brains, wit, or strength. Boo-ya! Actually, we find her accomplishments amazing, though far between. Sometimes she’s full of tricks and accomplishments and it feels like there’s no way she is only just six months old. There are other days when she pretty much just lays like a lump on the floor and chews on her own feet.

Her latest feats of greatness include sitting up by herself, eating solid foods like a champ, getting around the house via rolling, soothing herself to sleep for nap times, playing peek-a-boo, turning her toys on and off, and my most favorite – saying MAMA! Yes she says my name and calls for me when she’s upset or hungry or tired. It is the most amazing thing that I could have never imagined. My heart grows wings every time she says the word. Her little, unique voice saying MAAAAAAMA. The angels in heaven will have a lot of impressing to do to surpass this music to my ears.

Poppy loves her dad. This is obvious for a number of reasons. He has a scratchy face, he watches cartoons with her on Saturday mornings, and he sings her to sleep. There is so much joy in watching their relationship grow. She lights up like the sun when he walks in the door after work, smiling her ear-to-ear toothless grin.

For a nearly-six-month-old, Poppy seems really adventurous. She loves being tossed and bounced and thrown. She LOVES the swings at the park and will sit in the kiddie ones all by herself and hang on to the chain while I push her back and forth. Her little legs go kicking like crazy. It’s amazing to watch. She loves being in the grass. Not on a blanket on the grass, but feet, hands, legs, FACE in the grass. I think she has eaten a couple of bugs already.

She likes to yell a lot. This is a phenomenon we can’t yet fully explain. There are certain times of the day when she just leaves her mouth open and shrieks and squeals and practices her scales as loud as she possibly can. She usually falls asleep after this.

She sure is living up to her name sake. Our wild, red flower. Our little Poppy Anne.

Poppy Anne

Summertime and homemade goop

Summer is slipping through my fingers at a shameful rate. If next week is really and truly August already, then someone tie me up and leave me right here in July. I am enjoying our evenings at the park, reading on a blanket. I am enjoying the long, lazy weekends at my grandparents house on the lake. I am enjoying the neighborhood walks with Poppy and the free water park down the street. Summer, I love YOU!

In other news, I made my own baby food this morning (YES and it’s only 9am!). Not to my credit, I simply pureed frozen peaches and peas in my super-duper Vitamix, then poured the delicious goop into tiny-sized cubes (provided by the Team). Voila! Baby food. The peas smell like butt, so I will not blame Poppy if she refuses to eat them and makes pureed pea sculptures on her tray instead.

baby food

Someone keep me from throwing myself from this bridge when she starts college

Poppy slept in her crib last night. All night long. By herself.

Her nursery is on the opposite end of our modest apartment and you would have thought it was a hundred miles away, with the way I was sobbing in my pillow. It was a great night for her and she slept straight on through in her preferential sprawled out style, which was becoming increasingly difficult for her to do in her newborn bassinet. Still, did I mention that her nursery is two rooms away?

After she had been asleep in her crib for a few hours last night, Jacob and I were getting ourselves ready for bed. While he was finishing up the dishes in the kitchen, I walked into our bedroom, saw the empty bassinet next to the bed, and burst into tears. I walked back into the kitchen and buried my head in Jacob’s neck.

“What’s the matter, Honey?”

“She’s not in her bassinet”
[Insert more tears and lamenting here]

It probably didn’t help my state of mind that I had been perusing Flickr a few hours before and saw some delicious, wrinkled, new baby skin. Fresh, pink baby skin is my major, major weakness. Need something from me? Just wave some flaky, soft baby feet in front of my face and I’m all yours. I announced to a rather stunned Jacob that I was ready to have another baby. We agreed this was an irrational hallucination and my ovaries were playing tricks on me. No more babies for a long, long time. In fact, we are in the process of saving our dough to start the adoption process in a couple of years. By God’s grace, Poppy’s first sibling will be coming to us through adoption.

Needless to say, I am doing better this morning and stopped crying after I realized this transition from cradle-to-crib pales in comparison to upcoming milestones like first day of preschool, first sleepover and prom. Oh my God, I’ll just start on the panic attacks right now.

Poppy in her crib

Of motherhood and demolition

I’ve kept pretty mum lately about personal things since Poppy’s birth [a period that is in fact still HERE and NOW]. I’ve shared a lot of photos, snippets of new motherhood, and the happy tale of the birth. As things appear around here, motherhood rocks. It seems full of adorable moments, quiet reflections, fun baby giggles, and refreshing walks in the park. And trust me, sometimes it is. Every day is a real, tangible blessing that I wouldn’t trade. So don’t hate. I know what miracle I’m living.

I have, however, been ruminating over the idea of sharing another side of the last three and a half months. I kind of feel like I give the wrong impression of what this whole thing is like sometimes. It’s one thing to say things are “crazy” or “out of hand” on any given day, but it is an entirely different thing to open up and say that sometimes, no matter how blessed or miraculous, motherhood is cataclysmic.

[cataclysmic ˌ\ka-tə-ˈkliz-məl\adj. a momentous and violent event marked by overwhelming upheaval and demolition]

When Jacob and I got pregnant the first time, a baby now lost, it was an accident. An overzealous anniversary celebration, if you will. We were surprised, speechless, and a little bit whatthefuck? We had been married just one year. I had a great job, he had the luxury of a freelance career, we had two kitty cats and no money. We were living the life! Our marriage was really strong. Prior to getting hitched, we always fought. Somehow when we got married everyone relaxed and we really liked being room/soul mates.

For the sake of brevity, I’ll skip ahead and say that two months after getting pregnant, our baby died. We were really, really crushed. The day of my D&C, we looked at each other and said that we still wanted a family. We were not really ready, but we WANTED it and it felt right. I still think that’s the best decision we ever made. I’m not kidding, there was no preparation, no real reason – just little Poppy-to-be knocking at the door.

Fast forward a year later and I give birth to Poppy Anne. The first four weeks of her life are a whirlwind. I can’t even remember them – seriously. I have only the photos to prove they even happened. Oh, and a bloody bra from the first days of nursing to remind me NEVER TO HAVE A BABY AGAIN. Kidding.

I can’t even begin to tell you the changes in my life, my marriage, my body since Poppy has come.

My body. My poor, poor body. My stomach is covered in stretch marks from navel to Neverland. My boobs pretty much decided to warp into giantly uneven, awkward torpedos of death. And let’s not even talk about the baldness or the fact that, because of permanent hip-widening, I will never again wear single digit jean sizes. Does that grieve anyone else?

The changes in my marriage? My life? Jacob and I were shoved into new roles immediately after Poppy was born. Mother and Father. Say what? I stayed home from work, he got a full-time job. I suddenly found myself folding laundry, making food, cleaning. Readers, I DO NOT CLEAN. I DO NOT COOK. I am notorious for being a bad housewife. Jacob married me because I tell good jokes, not because I know what pasta primavera is [I don't]. Since Poppy, I have felt very trapped by these four walls. Some days I wake up deeply depressed. I have cried several times late at night and rolled over to tell Jacob “This is not what I want – it’s boring. It’s hard.”

Jacob, in the same way, has struggled to try to fit into a new thing called fatherhood. I can’t speak for him, but I can say that similar feelings of futility and what-the-hell-are-we-done-with-another-stupid-pointless-day-already? creep up frequently. You might know the same sense, definitely not linked only to new fatherhood, that is the rat race, the rhythm of Western life. It can suck the spark right out of you.

Jacob and I have had huge, major fights in the last three months. Fights that end with “I’m not happy. I want something else. Are we even on the same page?” These are scary questions to ask your spouse. S-C-A-R-Y. Without further disclosure of our personal crap, I will just say that our marriage took a hit. Divorce is not an option. Neither is living forever unhappy. What we have concluded is that we need LIFE in our lives. We’ve got to do things we like doing, even if they don’t fit into “motherhood” and “fatherhood.” For example, I like music. So instead of folding the laundry this morning, I cranked up The Doors and rocked out with Poppy in front of the sub woofer. The laundry still sits in the dryer I think. [I'm kinda afraid to go in the laundry room ever again].

My point, since this is getting too long, is that having a new family member who requires every ounce of who you are to survive and thrive, is hard work. Motherhood is nothing like I imagined. No one could have even prepared me for it if they tried. Not the sleepless nights and constant feedings and all that shit. That’s easy and like, whatever. The hard part of all this is figuring out who I am. This little girl defines me. I am her MOM now. Our family has THREE – father, mother, daughter. But, our family also is unique and we are unique as individuals [alright, BORG reference over]. We dance to our own beat. We suck at some things [like working and cleaning and living beautifully], but we excel at others [like quoting movies, playing outside and talking shit about the government].

My entrance into motherhood, and Jacob’s into fatherhood, has been nothing short of cataclysmic. It has been a momentous and violent event marked by overwhelming upheaval and demolition. Just about everything has fallen apart since Poppy has been born.

And I wouldn’t have it any other way.

A rap for the haters.

Okay, so I know this post from Girls Gone Child is like a year old, but man, can you say H-I-L-A-R-I-O-U-S?

“Wood shit is more expensive but it’s sure be much more classic…”

Oh man. So funny. Peace all my hipster mamas.

The Idle Parent

From Ohdeedoh

Yes! Stop the insanity that is our child-centric, consumerist, overindulgent culture!

Idle

Reflecting on the day

On the eve of my first Mother’s Day, I am filled with many, many feelings.

I am remembering back to last year’s Mother’s Day – Jacob and I were still mourning the loss of our first pregnancy. I think that was also the weekend we moved into our new house. I remember feeling sad that I didn’t have a baby to celebrate that day, but also feeling hopeful that we had a fresh start in our lives and new enthusiasm for making a baby. (Insert gagging brother who reads CrunchyCursive.com) Actually, Poppy was conceived sometime during that week after Mother’s Day. I have little blue stars on my calendar to prove it.

Today, I am also thinking about my own mom and the journey we have shared. I am thinking about how our relationship is changed, and refined, by the birth of a third generation. I’m thinking about all the things I have learned from my mom and all the things she did for me that I was completely ungrateful for and unaware of growing up. And how I want to do these same things for Poppy.

Tomorrow is a very bittersweet day for me. As I rocked Poppy Anne to sleep tonight, I held her close and cried warm tears on her cheeks. Those yummy, yummy cheeks. And I thought about the friends in my life who don’t have babies of their own to hold tomorrow. The day before Poppy was born, another little baby girl, Stephanie, was supposed to be delivered into this world. Instead, she went to heaven. She would have been three months and three days old today, but she is not here and I cannot imagine how her mother is torn apart with grief and anger. I cannot imagine. And I cannot understand. As I squeezed Poppy tight tonight, I thought of our dear friends who have 22 months of reasons to cry out in pain. I thought of the utter despair of a mother and father who cannot conceive a child.

I thought about Poppy’s destiny and the circumstances of her birth. What does her life mean in the wake of  the sorrow and pain of our friends? Poppy flowers represent eternity and the remembrance of death. The name Anne is in remembrance of my aunt’s baby daughter who never got a chance at life to the fullest. Perhaps Poppy has a destiny on her tiny life that is more than I can imagine.

Tonight, I thought about being a mother. I though about the change in my life over the last year. I thought about Poppy’s little heartbeat, now beating outside my body and growing stronger everyday. I thought about my future children – the ones waiting for me. I thought about the mothers who are going to carry our adopted children. I am already grieved by their pain and rejoicing in their strength.

It is a strange feeling being between complete joy and complete sorrow. Something I wrote about a long time ago, but still feels very true today. I feel like I am on a wall between two gardens. Tomorrow I will be celebrating the wonderful and beautiful life of my new daughter and my journey into motherhood – an experience I could have never imagined and can never explain in words. But also tomorrow, I will be thinking of lost babies, broken mothers, shattered hearts. Utter grief finds its match only in utter beauty. Life and death are so far apart that they actually become close again. The same with joy and pain.

So Happy Mother’s Day? Well, I can at least toast to the celebration of grace and mercy and beauty in the midst of pain. I can celebrate my bright Poppy flower for her smile and laughter and trusting spirit. She is a light for the world – bright and beautiful.

For the record

Dear readers,

I promise never to

[1] take a picture of my kid unknowingly holding an empty beer can

[2] share toddler quips that really aren’t that funny

[3] or condone this in any way, shape or form.

Just for the record.

Hate mail.

This is why I love random people on the Internets:

From StronglyConcerned on April 16, 2009
“This is not funny. I hope people close to you will be honest with you about some of the ways you treat/talk about your daughter. You have been loaned a little soul to care for, and this is not respectful of her or her lender. If you are struggling with Post-Natal Depression, please get help.”

Thanks, Strongly. Or do you prefer to be called SC? Either way, thanks for caring about my daughter and her lender. City Bank? Stork Mutual? I can’t even remember, gosh darn it. Post-Natal Depression IS so important that it requires capitalization, but thanks, I’ve already got a doctor looking out for me.

In the meanwhile, I will go pick my daughter up off the street corner and tell her it is disrepectful to herself to be selling her body for hard drugs – at least until she’s over 18.

Weekends

Our weekends have become less about scrapping and yelling and mixing it up and more about snuggling and yawning and cuddling it up. And I’m damn okay with that.

dscf0291

Poppy’s new favorite song

Seriously, this puts her to sleep every single time.

And we get bumped up for the Worst Parents of the Year award.

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